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An enlightening decision
Easement - abandonment? Print
It is very difficult to argue that someone has abandoned an easement. The starting point is to say that abandonment will only be inferred if it can be shown that the landowner had a fixed intention to never assert the right to the easement. In practice, the courts will be slow to infer abandonment because they take the view that 'owners of property do not normally wish to divest themselves of [such rights] unless it is to their advantage to do so, notwithstanding that they may have no present use for it' (Gotobed, [1971]). Thus, simple non-use (or not having any need to use the easement) will not of itself be enough to show abandonment.

The general view is that an extremely long period is needed to show an intention to abandon. In Ben [1992] the CA decided that 175 years of nonuse was not sufficient to raise a presumption of abandonment (in this case, there had been an alternative means of access and thus no need to use the right of way).

The attitude of the courts is well illustrated by a recent case in which a right of way was granted in 1964 'for all purposes connected with the use and enjoyment of the three garages… on the land'. Later, the three garages were demolished and replaced with a two-storey car park. The right of way continued to be used to get access to that car park (even though such use had been beyond that permitted by the 1964 easement). However, in due course, that two-storey car park was itself demolished and then replaced with three new garages. The question then arose as to whether the 1964 right of way was still in existence. It was held that it was and that the easement had not been abandoned. As such, the case decides nothing new but it does illustrate the difficulty of showing abandonment. CDC2020 v Ferreira [2005] EWCA Civ 611; source: www.practicallaw.com/8-200-7982. © Practical Lawyer

July 2005
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